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Chapters 38

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Diffraction, 3. The results of the single slit cannot be explained ... Wave 1 travels farther than wave 3 by an amount equal to the path difference (a/2) sin ? ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Chapters 38


1
Chapters 38
  • Diffraction and Polarization

2
Diffraction
  • Huygens principle requires that the waves spread
    out after they pass through slits
  • This spreading out of light from its initial line
    of travel is called diffraction
  • In general, diffraction occurs when wave pass
    through small openings, around obstacles or by
    sharp edges

3
Diffraction, 2
  • A single slit placed between a distant light
    source and a screen produces a diffraction
    pattern (DEMO)
  • It will have a broad, intense central band
  • The central band will be flanked by a series of
    narrower, less intense secondary bands
  • Called secondary maxima
  • The central band will also be flanked by a series
    of dark bands
  • Called minima

4
Diffraction, 3
  • The results of the single slit cannot be
    explained by geometric optics
  • Geometric optics would say that light rays
    traveling in straight lines should cast a sharp
    image of the slit on the screen

5
Examples of Diffraction
6
Fraunhofer Diffraction
  • Fraunhofer Diffraction occurs when the rays leave
    the diffracting object in parallel directions
  • Screen very far from the slit
  • Converging lens (shown)
  • A bright fringe is seen along the axis (? 0)
    with alternating bright and dark fringes on each
    side

7
Single Slit Diffraction
  • According to Huygens principle, each portion of
    the slit acts as a source of waves
  • The light from one portion of the slit can
    interfere with light from another portion
  • The resultant intensity on the screen depends on
    the direction ?

8
Single Slit Diffraction, 2
  • All the waves that originate at the slit are in
    phase
  • Wave 1 travels farther than wave 3 by an amount
    equal to the path difference (a/2) sin ?
  • If this path difference is exactly half of a
    wavelength, the two waves cancel each other and
    destructive interference results
  • In general, destructive interference occurs for a
    single slit of width a when sin ?dark m? / a
  • m 1, 2, 3,

9
Single Slit Diffraction, 3
  • The general features of the intensity
    distribution are shown
  • A broad central bright fringe is flanked by much
    weaker bright fringes alternating with dark
    fringes
  • The points of constructive interference lie
    approximately halfway between the dark fringes

10
Single Slit Intensity
  • One can use phasor method (see text pgs.
    1210-1211) to derive the exact intensity formula
  • This formula can be used to recover minima (easy)
    AND secondary maximum (hard) by taking derivative
    and setting 0

11
Real Double Slit Intensity
  • The real double slit formula is the combination
    if the interference and diffraction formulae

12
In a single-slit diffraction experiment, as the
width of the slit is made smaller, the width of
the central maximum of the diffraction pattern
becomes (a) smaller, (b) larger, or (c) remains
the same.
QUICK QUIZ 24.1
13
(b). The outer edges of the central maximum occur
where sin ? ?/a. Thus, as a, the width of the
slit, becomes smaller, the width of the central
maximum will increase.
QUICK QUIZ 24.1 ANSWER
14
Resolutions of Single Slit
  • Because of diffraction there is a finite
    resolution to things e.g. car head light s far
    away.

15
Resolutions of Single Slit II
  • For a slit the minimum resolution is determined
    when central maximum of one pattern overlaps the
    first minimum of the other
  • For circular slit (e.g. your pupil) we get

16
Resolutions of Single Slit III
17
Diffraction Grating
  • The diffracting grating consists of many equally
    spaced parallel slits
  • A typical grating contains several thousand lines
    per centimeter
  • The intensity of the pattern on the screen is the
    result of the combined effects of interference
    and diffraction

18
Diffraction Grating, cont
  • The condition for maxima is
  • d sin ?bright m ?
  • m 0, 1, 2,
  • The integer m is the order number of the
    diffraction pattern
  • If the incident radiation contains several
    wavelengths, each wavelength deviates through a
    specific angle

19
Diffraction Grating, final
  • All the wavelengths are focused at m 0
  • This is called the zeroth order maximum
  • The first order maximum corresponds to m 1
  • Note the sharpness of the principle maxima and
    the broad range of the dark area
  • This is in contrast to to the broad, bright
    fringes characteristic of the two-slit
    interference pattern (DEMO with laser and
    diffraction grating)

20
If laser light is reflected from a phonograph
record or a compact disc, a diffraction pattern
appears. This occurs because both devices contain
parallel tracks of information that act as a
reflection diffraction grating. Which device,
record or compact disc, results in diffraction
maxima that are farther apart?
QUICK QUIZ 24.2
21
The compact disc. The tracks of information on a
compact disc are much closer together than on a
phonograph record. As a result, the diffraction
maxima from the compact disc will be farther
apart than those from the record.
QUICK QUIZ 24.2 ANSWER
22
Polarization of Light Waves
  • Each atom produces a wave with its own
    orientation of E
  • All directions of the electric field E vector are
    equally possible and lie in a plane perpendicular
    to the direction of propagation
  • This is an unpolarized wave

23
Polarization of Light, cont
  • A wave is said to be linearly polarized if the
    resultant electric field vibrates in the same
    direction at all times at a particular point
  • Polarization can be obtained from an unpolarized
    beam by
  • selective absorption
  • reflection
  • scattering

24
Polarization by Selective Absorption
  • The most common technique for polarizing light
  • Uses a material that transmits waves whose
    electric field vectors in the plane parallel to a
    certain direction and absorbs waves whose
    electric field vectors are perpendicular to that
    direction

25
Selective Absorption, cont
  • E. H. Land discovered a material that polarizes
    light through selective absorption
  • He called the material polaroid
  • The molecules readily absorb light whose electric
    field vector is parallel to their lengths and
    transmit light whose electric field vector is
    perpendicular to their lengths

26
Selective Absorption, final
  • The intensity of the polarized beam transmitted
    through the second polarizing sheet (the
    analyzer) varies as
  • I Io cos2 ?
  • Io is the intensity of the polarized wave
    incident on the analyzer
  • This is known as Malus Law and applies to any
    two polarizing materials whose transmission axes
    are at an angle of ? to each other (DEMO with
    polarizer)

27
Polarization by Reflection
  • When an unpolarized light beam is reflected from
    a surface, the reflected light is
  • Completely polarized
  • Partially polarized
  • Unpolarized
  • It depends on the angle of incidence
  • If the angle is 0 or 90, the reflected beam is
    unpolarized
  • For angles between this, there is some degree of
    polarization
  • For one particular angle, the beam is completely
    polarized

28
Polarization by Reflection, cont
  • The angle of incidence for which the reflected
    beam is completely polarized is called the
    polarizing angle, ?p
  • Brewsters Law relates the polarizing angle to
    the index of refraction for the material
  • ?p may also be called Brewsters Angle
  • (DEMO Black surface)

29
Polarization by Scattering
  • When light is incident on a system of particles,
    the electrons in the medium can absorb and
    reradiate part of the light
  • This process is called scattering
  • An example of scattering is the sunlight reaching
    an observer on the earth becoming polarized

30
Polarization by Scattering, cont
  • The horizontal part of the electric field vector
    in the incident wave causes the charges to
    vibrate horizontally
  • The vertical part of the vector simultaneously
    causes them to vibrate vertically
  • Horizontally and vertically polarized waves are
    emitted (DEMO Blue Sky)

31
Liquid Crystals (Extra)
  • A liquid crystal is a substance with properties
    intermediate between those of a crystalline solid
    and those of a liquid
  • The molecules of the substance are more orderly
    than those of a liquid but less than those in a
    pure crystalline solid
  • To create a display, the liquid crystal is placed
    between two glass plates and electrical contacts
    are made to the liquid crystal
  • A voltage is applied across any segment in the
    display and that segment turns on

32
Liquid Crystals, cont (Extra)
  • Rotation of a polarized light beam by a liquid
    crystal when the applied voltage is zero
  • Light passes through the polarizer on the right
    and is reflected back to the observer, who sees
    the segment as being bright

33
Liquid Crystals, final (Extra)
  • When a voltage is applied, the liquid crystal
    does not rotate the plane of polarization
  • The light is absorbed by the polarizer on the
    right and none is reflected back to the observer
  • The segment is dark

34
Optical Activity (Extra)
  • Certain materials display the property of optical
    activity
  • A substance is optically active if it rotates the
    plane of polarization of transmitted light
  • Optical activity occurs in a material because of
    an asymmetry in the shape of its constituent
    materials
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